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Canada May Extend Rate Pledge to Slow Dollar Rise

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By Greg Quinn

(NOTE: In lieu of the recent posts I’ve made about the Bank of Canada and the near-term rising of the interest rates, I think it only fair and prudent to post this latest story from Bloomberg News)

Aug. 5 (Bloomberg) — The Bank of Canada may extend a commitment to leave its main interest rate at a record low if a stronger currency threatens to prolong the country’s recession, said Derek Holt, economist at Scotia Capital in Toronto.

Governor Mark Carney kept the benchmark rate at 0.25 percent last month. At the time, he said the currency is a major risk to economic growth, adding he has the “flexibility” to deal with it. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty yesterday echoed Carney, saying “steps could be taken to dampen” the dollar.

Carney has said he intends to leave the policy rate unchanged through the second quarter of 2010, and extending that pledge by a quarter or two is the best way to restrain the currency over a longer period, Holt said. Andrew Spence, a former central bank adviser and head of global interest rate and foreign exchange research at TD Securities, also made a similar prediction July 31.

“Canadian dollar strength does offset some of the need to take back stimulus through rate hikes at some point over the next year,” Holt said in a telephone interview from Toronto today. “I can see them waiting an extra quarter or two.”

Other options such as selling Canadian dollars to weaken the exchange rate, or purchases of securities, known as quantitative easing, may not be effective and would interfere with credit markets, he said.

‘Good Luck’

“If you’re the Bank of Canada trying to lean against global foreign exchange markets, good luck. You’re setting yourself up to have your head handed to you,” Holt said.

Canada’s dollar was little changed today after weakening following Flaherty’s comments yesterday. The currency was trading at C$1.0729 per U.S. dollar at 11:37 a.m. in Toronto from C$1.0726 yesterday.

The Bank of Canada abandoned a policy of systematic transactions in currency markets to control the dollar’s volatility in 1998. The central bank did not intervene in foreign exchange markets when the currency reached a record high in 2007, or when it had the biggest monthly gain since the Korean War during May.

The stronger currency makes Canada’s factory goods less competitive, in a year where the bankruptcies of General Motors Corp. and Chrysler Group LLC shut Canadian plants, dealers and parts suppliers. Factory sales have dropped 29 percent since last July, and manufacturers fired 221,500 workers in the 12 months through June, an 11 percent drop.

‘Always a Risk’

“There is always a risk with that sort of thing,” said Paul Riganelli, chief financial officer of Exco Technologies Ltd. in Markham, Ontario, referring to the central bank trying to influence the currency’s value. “I think it’s done what it can, and I think the rest is up to us.”

“We are seeing major fluctuations of 5 to 10 percent within a 30-day period in either direction, and that is causing all sorts of problems with planning,” said Riganelli, whose company’s products include die-cast auto parts.

The Bank of Canada said July 23 the economy will grow at a 1.3 percent annualized pace this quarter, marking the end of a recession that began at the end of last year. Output for the year as a whole will still shrink 2.3 percent, the bank says.

The central bank provides updates on the rate commitment at each of its fixed announcement dates. The next is on Sept. 10. Low Canadian interest rates can weaken the currency if investors take their money out of the country to seek higher returns elsewhere.

“It has its most impact in terms of the jawboning if it comes in an official rate statement,” said Mark Chandler, a fixed income strategist at RBC Capital Markets in Toronto. Over a longer period, statements of concern about the currency have to “be tied to some shift in bank policy to some easier stance,” he said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Greg Quinn in Ottawa atgquinn1@bloomberg.net.

Interest Rates Rising?

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BoC may have to break interest rate promise

Alia McMullen, Financial Post Published: Thursday, July 23, 2009

More On This Story

TORONTO — The Canadian dollar hit a 10-month high Monday amid growing risk appetite and rising expectations that inflation will ultimately force the Bank of Canada to break its promise to keep interest rates on hold until mid-2010.

“The time for tightening is not yet at hand, but June 2010 seems too late,” said Yanick Desnoyers, the assistant chief economist at National Bank Financial. “The day when the condition for the Bank’s low-rate commitment is no longer met will probably come before then.”

Mr. Desnoyers said the benchmark interest rate had been lowered to a record low of 0.25% to limit the damage of the recession and financial crisis. However, he said the rate was too low relative to core inflation, which stood at 1.9% in June, just one basis point below the bank’s target rate.

The outlook for higher interest rates, whether they come sooner or after June next year, has helped support the Canadian dollar, which has increased by about 8% since the beginning of the month.

The loonie inched up US0.16¢ to US$92.50 Monday after reaching its highest level since October in intraday trade. The rise was boosted by an improvement in investor sentiment after new U.S. home sales surged by 11% in June and the three-month Libor rate, the benchmark borrowing rate banks generally charge each other, fell to a record low 0.496%.

The decline in Libor, which peaked at 4.82% in October, is a sign that credit pressures continue to ease. Commodity prices were also marginally higher amid expectations of an uptick in demand.

Aron Gampel, vice president and deputy chief economist at Scotia Capital, said the Canadian dollar has also strengthened against the greenback because many were concerned U.S. stimulus efforts would leave behind a problematic debt hangover. He said the loonie was likely on its way back to parity with the U.S. dollar.

With the Bank of Canada having declared that the recession is likely over, interest is beginning to turn to when interest rates will begin to rise. Some, such as Mr. Desnoyers, believe the Canadian recovery, bolstered by government stimulus, will push inflation up faster than expected, forcing the Bank of Canada to use its “get out of jail free card” and raise the benchmark policy rate before June 2010.

The central bank said it would keep interest rates on hold until June 2010 “conditional on the outlook for inflation”.

Bond yields have risen in recent weeks and now reflect a 90% chance of an interest rate rise withing nine months.

Others, such as Mr. Gampel, believe the central bank will keep interest rates on hold until mid next year, but embark on an aggressive tightening thereafter. However, he said the economy was at a turning point and the Bank of Canada’s ultimate decision would depend on the speed of economic recovery.

“They could be looking at having to push interest rates up at a faster rate, and sooner, if the recovery takes on a greater scope going forward,” Mr. Gampel said.

He said the recovery could well be on track to outpace expectations as businesses rebuild inventories, consumer spending picks up and fiscal stimulus kicks in.

However, he said evidence to date does not suggest the central bank will need to hike rates before June, particularly with a large amount of excess capacity in product and labour markets.

Latest Canadian Mortgage News

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(compiled by Calum Ross Mortgage Team)

Mortgage Market Update for the Week of July 10, 2009

This Week’s Mortgage Market Update Contains:

  • Improved affordability helps spur housing market, says RBC Economics
  • Housing sales report best June on record in Greater Toronto Area
  • U.S. MBA Mortgage Applications Index Rose 11 Percent Last Week

This Week’s Quotation:

“Finish each day and be done with it. You have done what you could. Some blunders and absurdities no doubt crept in; forget them as soon as you can. Tomorrow is a new day; begin it well and serenely and with too high a spirit to be encumbered with your old nonsense.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803 – 1882)

This Week’s Highlights:

  • Canadian interest rates to remain low; long-term bond yields to grind lower with USTs
  • Canadian dollar’s strength presents clear and present danger to economic outlook
  • Inflation rate stays in positive territory

Read the rest of this entry »

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